I am trying to report timber sales income from a 1099-S.
After entering to 1099-S on who issued the 1099-S, it jumps to adding information on a 1099-B
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Yes, that is correct. Both the 1099-B and the 1099-S are information returns actually filed by the brokers. You are entering specific information from your copy of these forms to populate a Schedule D for gains/losses on investment sales.
Since the 1099-S information is a subset of 1099-B information, the entry area/labels are the same (1099-B). When you select "Other Investment (1099-S)" some of the entries required for a 1099-B are eliminated based on a form 1099-S.
Neither of these forms are attached to your tax returns; only the required information from them for the Schedule D is used.
Yes, that is correct. Both the 1099-B and the 1099-S are information returns actually filed by the brokers. You are entering specific information from your copy of these forms to populate a Schedule D for gains/losses on investment sales.
Since the 1099-S information is a subset of 1099-B information, the entry area/labels are the same (1099-B). When you select "Other Investment (1099-S)" some of the entries required for a 1099-B are eliminated based on a form 1099-S.
Neither of these forms are attached to your tax returns; only the required information from them for the Schedule D is used.
when receiving a 1099-S for a home sale, enter the transaction exactly as you would have without getting the 1099-S, even if your capital gain is excluded. IRS wants to see the detail.
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